Barth v. Kansas City Elevated Railway Co.

44 S.W. 778, 142 Mo. 535, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 16, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 44 S.W. 778 (Barth v. Kansas City Elevated Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barth v. Kansas City Elevated Railway Co., 44 S.W. 778, 142 Mo. 535, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 188 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

This action- is by the widow of Bartholomew Barth for damages resulting to Jaer from his death, occasioned, as she alleges, by the negligence of the defendant, at its elevated station at Ninth and Mulberry streets in Kansas City, Missouri.

Plaintiff’s husband was killed February 25, 1894, and this action was commenced March 22, 1894. The record shows that at the April term, 1894, defendant appeared and moved to dismiss the suit, which motion was overruled. On May 5, 1894, defendant demurred, but on June 16, 1894, withdrew its demurrer, and on the same day plaintiff filed an amended petition which defendant answered October 9, 1894, and afterward on December 12, 1894, the second amended petition, on which this cause was heard, was filed. It contained two counts, but as the second was withdrawn, the first count only remains as the basis of the judgment recovered. The first count avers in substance that plaintiff, on the twenty-fifth of February, 1894, was the lawful wife of Bartholomew Barth and on that day defendant was a railway corporation organized under the laws of Kansas, and was engaged in operating an elevated electric street railway for the carriage of passengers for hire between Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, [541]*541Missouri; that in order to patronize said railway, passengers were required to ascend to its stations by means of steps and go upon elevated platforms in order to get into its cars; that the platform and station at Ninth and Mulberry streets is about twenty to thirty feet above the surface of the ground; that on the west end of said platform defendant had erected a fence or guard railing to protect persons patronizing its road from falling off of said platform, but had so negligently or carelessly constructed it that it left a space of about three feet between the track of said company and the south end of said fence or railing, thus rendering said platform exceedingly dangerous to its patrons making use thereof to enter its trains; that it had permitted said platform to remain in this condition for a year prior to February 25, 1894, and for a time sufficient for defendant to have ascertained its dangerous condition by the exercise of ordinary care. The petition then charges the facts attending the death of plaintiff’s husband in these words:

“Plaintiff further states, for the purpose of admitting passengers to the cars owned and operated on its said railroad as aforesaid, steps are supplied on the right hand side of the rear platform, by the aid of which passengers are invited and are accustomed to go upon the platform and into said cars. That each of said cars and the particular one hereinafter mentioned is provided with a gate which is intended to guard against accidents and to prevent passengers from falling from the cars while in motion; that the rules of the defendant company provided that the gates of the cars should be kept closed while the cars were running over the elevated structure and that the cars should not be started until passengers were fairly landed or received on the car. That it was the duty of the agents, employees and servants of defendant to keep said gates [542]*542closed while running said cars over the elevated structure, and they were only accustomed to be open while the cars were stopped for the admission of passengers at the several stations along said railroad.
“Plaintiff states that, to wit, on said twenty-fifth day of February, 1894, the husband of plaintiff, Bartholomew Barth, entered the station of said defendant company at the corner of Ninth and Mulberry streets as aforesaid for the purpose of taking a trip west as a passenger on one of defendant’s Cars. Plaintiff states that the destination of her said husband, Bartholomew Barth, was his home in Kansas City, Kansas, near one of the terminal stations of said defendant company in said Kansas City, Kansas, and that upon the arrival at said station of the first car of said railway conducted, maintained and operated by said defendant and so propelled by the servants, agents and employees of defendant’s company, and after said car had been stopped and the gate of the car opened for the admission of passengers, the husband of said plaintiff attempted to get upon said car for the purpose of riding upon the same as aforesaid.
“Plaintiff states that while Bartholomew Barth was in the act of getting upon said car, and before he had sufficient time to get upon the platform of said car, and without waiting for said Bartholomew Barth to board said car or to get upon a safe portion of the platform of the same, and before said gate had been closed, the agents, servants and employees of defendant, managing its said railway and in charge of said car, and knowing that he was in the act of boarding said car, negligently and carelessly started said car forward suddenly and at a rapid rate of speed, causing said Bartholomew Barth, the husband of this plaintiff, to be thrown with great force and violence off the car and upon the platform, near the point where said [543]*543fence or guard on the west end of said platform was negligently and carelessly left open; and by reason of the fact that said fence or guard was left exposed and open on the west end of said platform as aforesaid, and there being nothing- to stop his body and nothing which he could grasp to save himself, he was by the impetus of said fall from defendant’s' car, propelled with great force and violence over said platform to the surface of the ground, twenty to thirty feet below.
“Plaintiff states that by reason of said fall, caused by the negligence and carelessness of the servants, employees and agents of said defendant as aforesaid, said Bartholomew Barth, the husband of plaintiff, was so greatly bruised, mangled and hurt that he died; that such death resulted from and was directly occasioned by the defect and insufficiency in the construction of said guard or fence as aforesaid, and by the carelessnéss and negligence of said servants, agents •and employees in so starting said car before said Bartholomew Barth had got upon said car and before the gate to said car was closed as aforesaid.
“Plaintiff states that she was dependent upon the deceased, Bartholomew Barth, for her support, and has suffered pecuniary loss and has been otherwise injured by the death of said Bartholomew Barth to her damage in the sum of five thousand dollars. '
“Wherefore plaintiff asks judgment for said sum' of five thousand dollars, and for all costs herein incurred and expended.”

The answer is a general denial and plea of contributory negligence of plaintiff’s husband.

At the January term, 1895, there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $4,500. Motions for ' new trial and in arrest were duly filed and overruled and defendant appeals.

The evidence disclosed these facts. The station [544]*544at Mulberry street on defendant’s line is at least twenty feet above the surface of Ninth and Mulberry streets and is reached by a stairway. The platform was about thirty-eight feet long, the station house in the center, with two doors opening south on the platform along the tracks. It is nineteen feet from a point between the two doors to the western edge of the platform. The platform is about eight feet wide in front of the station house. The mode of operation is to require passengers to remain in the station house until a car arrives and then open the door and the passengers cross the platform and enter the cars.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W. 778, 142 Mo. 535, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barth-v-kansas-city-elevated-railway-co-mo-1898.